A Central Texas grand jury indicted 14 people with alleged ties to the Mexican drug cartel Los Zetas. The cartel’s leader, Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, and two of his brothers were among those indicted.

Federal investigators say the defendants were involved in a money laundering scheme for the cartel involving the horse racing business.

Authorities arrested seven of the indicted individuals on Tuesday. One person was arrested in Austin.

As part of the indictment, officials are seeking assets including cash, equipment, horses and real estate, including land in Bastrop County.

If convicted, the defendants face up to 20 years in prison.

Though hours from the Mexican border, this is not Austin's first experience with drug cartel-related problems. As KUT reported in March 2011, Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo stated that Central Texas was of strategic importance to international traffickers:

You’ve heard about the Zetas, well I’m here to tell you that they are alive and well and they’re present in Austin, he said.

Impact of Eligible, Unregistered Latino Voters Could Be Significant

More than two million Texas Latinos who are U.S. citizens are not registered to vote.

A new report by the Center for American Progress says the number exceeds the “margin of victory” in the 2008 presidential election in Texas. The same is true for seven other states, mostly in the southwest.

The figure does not include nearly 900,000 legal permanent residents who could also potentially vote in the fall after becoming citizens.

Many see the demographic as untapped resource, although The Texas Tribune reports that it's not clear whether Latinos would favor Democrats over Republicans.

The demographic is often assumed to be loyal to the Democratic Party, but party leaders of both stripes have ramped up their efforts to lure more Hispanics to their side. Republicans say they have begun making inroads among Latinos, as seen in the Texas House, which now has seven lawmakers of Hispanic descent.

The Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Miami Heat 105-94 last night, coming back from a 13 point deficit to win Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

Several former UT-Austin athletes were part of the action, including Thunder small forward Kevin Durant who scored 36 points in the game – 17 of those in the final quarter. Durant's efforts also helped Oklahoma City beat the San Antonio Spurs in the deciding game of the NBA Western Conference Finals.

Other former UT players involved in the NBA Finals are Royal Ivey, also with the Thunder, and Dexter Pittman, with the Heat.

A team of architects and planners has been studying the south shore of Lady Bird Lake near Congress and South First Street. Last night, they presented three proposals for future of the south shore.

The first focuses on using the area as a natural resource for things like urban agriculture and recreation. The second proposal would include public space but also make room for hotels and food trailers. The third option would include lots of housing and transit.

The expert team will present a more detailed report in the next few months.

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has refused to clear Texas’ voter ID requirements, passed by the Texas Legislature in 2011.

The state and the DOJ have been at odds over the issue for months, with the feds requesting additional information to ascertain whether the law would have a disproportionate impact on minority citizens.

Texas is one of the Southern states covered under the Voting Rights Act; Section 5 of the act requires the DOJ to “pre-clear” any electoral changes states make that might impact minority voters.

Pounds of pot, kilos of cocaine and bundles of bills were on display at an Austin police station today.

The department’s organized crime division was showing off what it obtained from three major drug seizures over the past month. APD Assistant Chief Sean Mannix said officers also captured more than six-and-a-half pounds of tar heroin.

"In talking to the other officers and detectives, supervisors in the room, none of us in our memories can remember a seizure of heroin that large in the city of Austin,” said Assistant Chief Mannix. “It’s a tremendous amount of heroin."